21 JUNE 1924, Page 12

[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—I have read with

great interest the article on " London Traffic," by Mr. Gordon Selfridge. The subject dealt with is one to which I have paid special attention, and I should like to say that the article in question is, in my opinion, a sound,

common-sense method of dealing with the present difficulty, and what one might expect from the pen of Mr. Selfridge. I should like to add, however, that where two lines of traffic cross one another on the same level, when the one is passing the other must stop, and the only way of overcoming this difficulty is for the two lines of traffic to cross at different